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About Kendall Chronicle (Kendall, Mont.) 1902-190? | View This Issue
Kendall Chronicle (Kendall, Mont.), 26 May 1903, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053338/1903-05-26/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
As_111, May 26; 1903. 3. sl • *ACV:. , t; TI... Anationds nnpany .$ui1 t ease PortIon• of it. Mines The Amalgamated Copper company of Butte has anneuiteed its return to the old policy of giving leases on var- ious portions of its mines; a policy which was inaugurated by the late Marcus Daly. In conrmettitig on this fact the Butte Tribune -Review says: In many of the great mines of Butte there are certein small veins of (pp or \stilhigres:\: , enough py tributeri or lestrees good wageS; but which 30 'nOt warrant/he. emItIrriment of expensive company machinery. The small veins sometimes lead to large ore bodies and sometimehi they peter out, but in; many instahces they itt- satir4Orei or lesp profIt as . the result of 'eChnomical wbrking and in all cage they help explore - thei - inineS and increases their output, so that both the leasers and the mining com- panies are metually lieiefitted. Faw mining companies care to follow every feeder or offshoot they intersect in their underground workings, but many good miners are willing to take the chances in exploring them and oft - times the best results are recorded. In some of the Amalgamated mines the conditions do not warrant such work, but in others there are oppor- tenitiea for men who .are wIlling to take a chance with fortune, and some of such men will be given a lease in certain of the compan - y'h mince, so it is reported on . reliable authority. The _work_ moderate crate at fir:A and experience will determine •tts what / extpnt $11e1r?e•acjpolitT,tili r Je • I kaAikad'•caltl. A1lie6AIr a part: of !!the Bell, Moose, Wild Bill and Idodoc are reported td have been Offered for leas- ing purposes, oa basis, it 13 stated of 25 per cent. and a fair smelting charge. 1 ' '• ' • The Pt - SUN -of the new'.polloy.. prom ises a new, era for Bette as other cora palates will . likely 'folio* suit, and the laber and' business interests will reap the ' harvest. The • number' 'of ners-tirst•-•-ean-be--atevied -away- in leatted • -greend 1 A tha t udnes qf this camP fb very - large, but time should first be allowed .to , demonstrate the practical working of the s3stens on a small Beale. TROUBLE WITH. UNION and lodging that he furnishes. The prominent farmers of the Mis- soula and Bitter Root valleys state that if the labor union acts arbitrarily In this matter it will mean that the farmers will have to seed down their farms and go to raising stock; that they cannot afford to raise vegetables with the wages the *labor union has designated. They state they are Un- able to get prices on products' which. they produce, such as potatoes, onions, parsnips, apples, wheat, oats, barley and all other fruits and vegetables, for, the reasen that they have to go into union markets in competion with stuff from such states as Washington, Idaho, Utah and Oregon, where cheap labor and Chinese labor 13 employed. Frank Said Disaster Wise horrible Lou Frank, brother of H. L. Frank. ..vho has returned to Butte from the coal mining town of Frank, N. W. T., which was the reault of the recent this- astor, when a portion of the mountain slid clewn on the town, says the di* aster was fully as horrible as was told in the press dispatches. The Ca- n2.dian government engineers estimate drat 85,000,000 tons of rock broke loose from their fastenings on the steep side of the mountain and *slid down, carrying death and destruction in their wake. Fragments of rack varied in size from pebbles to pieces of boulders as large as a house. Mr. Frank says the damage caused by the slide was greater to the town than to the, Mew, ,- . The; Canadian •paciile railroad sustained a damage of $250,- 000. H. L. Frank ha e gone east to pnrehase: t newitachinery. for the- ear - !ace working of the mine, and cit expected the plant will be in opera- tion 'nide.' of ..sixty days. The Ca- nadian, gevernment has Promised in Incur the expcnse of blasting the dab-• gerous portions of the mountain bt. tiler; to toreteht - reizetition of lire disaster.- ' • - - .1 I -ft • • , • THEY TOOIC. NO SOUP. ICU\ Mit littnnatth - Butttetrefor- Omuta rod Form Bands las the Bitter Root r-Oljletiarmer t ' ts ; ', ar44;n origin (self .S'Ome • Akita's' agoS In e ,.. s tbe . .BItter Fick has already locked horns with Labor Un- ion Np„$,Aesf lidisseapj„i over the qucc- tics cf wages and hours oi work for farm hand-s, says. the. .Phillipaburg Call. . The tre:sulsle hap grown ottt ef.a scale - f\ waies ivitic 4,Whis adopted '16' itht union a „few , weeks agcy . in which they foinibiat:ii a seile of wagos forlfitita labr;iirers at $2.50 for nine hours or $40 a month and board. The farmers contend that they cant stand such a' Wage,' Seale for nine . honrs. Freqeently . in the hayfng sea- son, they say there 13 heavy dew in tbe morning and it Is late before the hands, can ,go to work, and, they , may 'net Work over eight hours that dell': or a small rain may cause 'all hinds to remain idle for two hours. Tlie farmers feel that on a good ,day their help FhOuld ,work ten. hours.. Farmers also contend that,the:Iabor • oaten; while It\ mast baVe h - right to designate what shalt collet:H* 1 e a day's wages, has no right to sailvhat ..a former, rtiattilçliaige., toF, ,142 ,bo4.rd ; that hie board ..14 •ati much his pro- duct nn..labor4s h hands product -and- l ono. hari--a. right .t.s..saj....whaf shall be his pay_ for . a day's labor, on f oti)or hind:siioelAThave • ., 44.4,as,pauch „right to Mate cxhat , price tc re:dye folk -Melia bh sas Otte Is the Early Darn of Ole ROpabliei• 7 . -111iVal. 'GO for Inv#1140 / i only. Se'rvin ' g tlitnier' in - courses Is . com, , paratively a modern fashion, first in- troduced - in diphiptatic' circles in Washington, n. C., and imitated from France. Up to the date of President Poll's - asitninfisttation 'the c'ourse din- ner among Americans had made no further . .preress ban -that of serv- ing fish arm sonp separately. Soup' was considered 'such a foreign frip- pery ehat• a note written • by Gen tVinfield Scott, in which he explained that he was \just sitting down to a hasty plate of soup,\ covered him with such tidicule as to materially contribute to his defeat as a candi- slate...for. the • presidency, as ,Lippie. cott's. Soup in the early days of the was cOnsidered - aa *food' for ievOlide or pilor people only; la,ter. when the social splendoes of the court of Empress Eugenie attracted\ rich ,Arneritaxis in ocks to Paris, French table manners and custom ' puehed the old English dinner fash- ions to the wall. It is doubtful, how- ever;.if apUti ever founcl a *place on the dinner table of the wealthy Maryland or, Virgfairesslatiter, unless green turtle, which was really a stew, might be so called. • - • • LUNACY ON THE INCREASE. N ' t A Swedish Profess/me Safen - illaai Ld- te4Womeaea Ar. Ow Cadet viethaa. . - Hermann 'tundboi-gi of the great Swedish Inna,tic • avlom at Upsala, say Aiet lanace is increasing among Swedish ...wqrrien and more especially among tee ethreated classes. In the lawer elasees insanity is brought on -6hee'llY by the carOs of life or intem- perance, but in the educated women the Main' cause, he Contends, is their ieducatiqn. • , Dr. Lundberg emphatically asserts tha't tlie forced training to which this ************ 1 Club Saloo'ii: CLINOAN & HAMILTON, Proprietors M'K1XLEY 4VENUE, KEXD,.4LL High Grade r.cile Cigars TRY OUR Cedar Brock Bourbon Hunter's Rye W hiskies Plir44 - 4444 - - 4 - 41 - #70111000413 Siit#13 4 PW•444f* 4410 - 4r#44044144414#4 11 01 NTANA Rust f lers • ARD WARE Trade COMPANY Lewistown Montana We have on hand and can fill your orders for MINING SUPPLIES, ASSAYERS' SUPPLIES, PROSPECTING OUTFITS In fact everything needed for mining and prclif pecting EXCEPT THE FINE Now is the time to beautify your home. Nature is putting a new dress on Mother earth and you should put a new coat of Paint on Your House inside and out. The Montana Hardware Company has a complete line of Devoe's Ready -Mixed Paints that are guaranteed. DON'T buy cheap paints, but send your mail orders to the MONTANA HARDWARE COMPANY and get the best. We also have a Complete Line of Wagons, Buggies, Harness, Shelf and Heavy Hardware, Steel Ranges, Cooking Stoves, Woven Wire Fencing, Poultry Netting and all other spring goods Screen Doors, Garden Seeds, Lawn Grass Seeds Caliiii - or - send your orders by the Kendall Stage Company Montana Hardware Company Telephone 52 I. Montana Lumber Conitiany Mouldings Sash Doors Shingles, Etc. Estimates Furnished on Application Corner Fifth Ave. and Water Street, Lewistown class of women submit themselves is mead. hurtful. \It is monstrous,\ he says, \to sub- ject women to this competition, and If the competition does not cease ef- ficts upon future generations will be disastrous.\ Dr. Lundberg states that the Swed- ish who have been educated in acade- Miea have remarkably small families when they have any and that in too many cases their family relations are unhappy owing to their inability to discharge household duties. s Barged Streets. Each' year about $50,000 is expended in sprinkling the streets of London with sand, to prevent horses from slip- ping. DENTISTRY Dr. M. M. Hedges Office Over Judith Hard- ware Store, Lewistown. Has been in practice over thirty years and guarantees all his operations. -'4-